Google’s response to the attempted terror attack in New York this morning, widely reported to have been carried out by a Bangladeshi ISIS supporter, was to suggest it would censor information related to the suspect’s connection to the Islamic State or the religion of Islam.

The failed attack happened at around 7:20am in an underpass at the Port Authority terminal near Times Square when the terrorist failed to detonate a pipe bomb correctly.

Within a short period of time, reports began to emerge that the suspect was a Bangladeshi ISIS supporter who had been living in the U.S. for seven years.

However, when Twitter users, including myself and the Daily Caller, began to share this information, CNET’s Alfred Ng tweeted, “None of this has been confirmed, but here it is on Google’s top results.”

The context of the tweet was a controversy that erupted after last month’s Texas church massacre, when many on the left complained about Google’s search results returning links to tweets about the attack from non-establishment news sources that was inaccurate.

Danny Sullivan, Google’s public liaison for search, who has over 500,000 followers on Twitter, quickly responded to Ng’s tweet by commenting, “Passing out along to our teams to look.”